Mekong Utility Watch

Dam the Salween, damn its people

Asia Times Online
September 14, 2006

Controversial plans to dam the Salween River in Burma will proceed without a standard environmental-impact assessment study, despite serious concerns about the effect the project will have on the area’s people and natural surroundings.

Mae Sam Laeb, Thailand: Controversial plans to dam the Salween River, Southeast Asia’s longest natural free-flowing waterway, will proceed without a standard environmental-impact assessment study, despite serious concerns about the effect the infrastructure project will have on the area’s people and natural surroundings. This month, Thailand’s state-run monopoly EGAT finally formalized its long-pending plans to build five hydroelectric dams along the Salween River inside Myanmar. An EGAT spokesman said previous plans for the study were finally abandoned to avoid meddling in Myanmar’s internal affairs. Combined, the five dams have the potential to produce 10,000-15,000 megawatts of power, and would provide a desperately needed source of income for Myanmar’s cash-strapped ruling military junta.

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